That doesn’t mean the Canton Charge aren’t looking for ways to improve.

In what turned out to be a very fruitful day, the Charge traded for combo guard Ben Uzoh Wednesday, shortly before putting together maybe their best performance of the season in a rout of Fort Wayne to move into sole possession of first place in the East Division.

The Charge expect to have Uzoh available when they play the first of back-to-back games in Delaware on Friday night. Canton dealt a 2014 third-round draft pick to the Tulsa 66ers for the 6-foot-3, 205-pound Uzoh.

“He adds another ball handler, another guy that knows how to play,” Cavaliers Director of D-League Operations Mike Gansey said.

“A tough-minded kid, a defender. With how we defend, I think he’s going to fit in well.”

The Charge entered Thursday allowing the second fewest points per game (98.5) in the league.

The Charge — and the Cavaliers organization on a bigger whole — have liked Uzoh for a while. He played two games for the Cavs while on a 10-day contract during the 2011-12 season.

Overall Uzoh has played in 60 NBA games with the Cavs, Raptors and Nets. He registered a triple-double in a 2011-12 game with the Raptors.

Uzoh, 25, averaged 12.3 points, 4.8 rebounds, 4.6 assists and 1.5 steals in 22 games (all starts) this season with Tulsa. A streaky jump shooter, he shot 43.1 percent from the field, 23.5 percent from the 3-point line and 77.4 percent from the foul line.

All those marks are in line with his career averages, which he has accumulated over parts of four D-League seasons with Tulsa, Springfield and Rio Grande Valley.

Uzoh became available when Tulsa traded for Erie guard Mustafa Shakur.

“We thought for a third-round pick there is a lot of value with Ben,” Gansey said.

The trade likely will force the Charge to play Bo Spencer at more of a two-guard position instead of the point. Spencer is coming off a 17-point performance in the Fort Wayne win.

Uzoh joins a backcourt that already has Jorge Gutierrez, another hard-nosed point guard. Gutierrez is sixth in the league at 6.6 assists per game to go with 13.4 points and 6.1 rebounds. Interestingly enough, the two guards have butted heads on the court when playing against each other. Gutierrez and Uzoh had to be separated at the end of a game last year in Canton.

“Those two wanted to rip each other’s heads off,” Gansey said with a laugh. “Hopefully now that they’re on the same team, they can be friends.”